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16PF Questionnaire

The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (16PF) is a self-report personality test developed over several decades of empirical research by Raymond B. Cattell, Maurice Tatsuoka and Herbert Eber. The 16PF provides a measure of personality and can also be used by psychologists, and other mental health professionals, as a clinical instrument to help diagnose psychiatric disorders, and help with prognosis and therapy planning. The 16PF can also provide information relevant to the clinical and counseling process, such as an individual's capacity for insight, self-esteem, cognitive style, internalization of standards, openness to change, capacity for empathy, level of interpersonal trust, quality of attachments, interpersonal needs, attitude toward authority, reaction toward dynamics of power, frustration tolerance, and coping style. Thus, the 16PF instrument provides clinicians with a normal-range measurement of anxiety, adjustment, emotional stability and behavioral problems. Clinicians can use 16PF results to identify effective strategies for establishing a working alliance, to develop a therapeutic plan, and to select effective therapeutic interventions or modes of treatment.[1] It can also be used within other areas of psychology, such as career and occupational selection.[2]

16PF Questionnaire
MeSHD002416

Beginning in the 1940s, Cattell used several techniques including the new statistical technique of common factor analysis applied to the English-language trait lexicon to elucidate the major underlying dimensions within the normal personality sphere. This method takes as its starting point the matrix of inter-correlations between these variables in an attempt to uncover the underlying source traits of human personality.[3] Cattell found that personality structure was hierarchical, with both primary and secondary stratum level traits.[4] At the primary level, the 16PF measures 16 primary trait constructs, with a version of the Big Five secondary traits at the secondary level.[5][6][7] These higher-level factors emerged from factor-analyzing the 16 x 16 intercorrelation matrix for the sixteen primary factors themselves. The 16PF yields scores on primary and second-order "global" traits, thereby allowing a multilevel description of each individual's unique personality profile. A listing of these trait dimensions and their description can be found below. Cattell also found a third-stratum of personality organization that comprised just two overarching factors.[8][9]

The measurement of normal personality trait constructs is an integral part of Cattell's comprehensive theory of intrapersonal psychological variables covering individual differences in cognitive abilities, normal personality traits, abnormal (psychopathological) personality traits, dynamic motivational traits, mood states, and transitory emotional states[10] which are all taken into account in his behavioral specification/prediction equation.[11] The 16PF has also been translated into over 30 languages and dialects and is widely used internationally.[12][13]

Cattell and his co-workers also constructed downward extensions of the 16PF – parallel personality questionnaires designed to measure corresponding trait constructs in younger age ranges, such as the High School Personality Questionnaire (HSPQ) – now the Adolescent Personality Questionnaire (APQ) for ages 12 to 18 years,[14] the Children's Personality Questionnaire (CPQ),[15] the Early School Personality Questionnaire (ESPQ),[16] as well as the Preschool Personality Questionnaire (PSPQ).[17]

Cattell also constructed (T-data) tests of cognitive abilities such as the Comprehensive Ability Battery (CAB) – a multidimensional measure of 20 primary cognitive abilities,[18] as well as measures of non-verbal visuo-spatial abilities, such as the three scales of the Culture-Fair Intelligence Test (CFIT),[19] In addition, Cattell and his colleagues constructed objective (T-data) measures of dynamic motivational traits including the Motivation Analysis Test (MAT),[20] the School Motivation Analysis Test (SMAT),[21] as well as the Children's Motivation Analysis Test (CMAT).[22][23] As for the mood state domain, Cattell and his colleagues constructed the Eight State Questionnaire (8SQ), a self-report (Q-data) measure of eight clinically important emotional/mood states, labeled Anxiety, Stress, Depression, Regression, Fatigue, Guilt, Extraversion, and Arousal.[24]

Outline

The most recent edition of the Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (16PF), released in 1993, is the fifth edition (16PF5e) of the original instrument.[25][26] The self-report instrument was first published in 1949; the second and third editions were published in 1956 and 1962, respectively; and the five alternative forms of the fourth edition were released between 1967 and 1969.[27]

The goal of the fifth edition revision in 1993 was to:

  • update, improve, and simplify the language used in the test items;
  • simplify the answer format;
  • develop new validity scales;
  • improve the psychometric properties of the test, including new reliability and validity data; and
  • develop a new standardization sample (of 10,000 people) to reflect the current U.S. Census population.

The 16PF Fifth Edition contains 185 multiple-choice items which are written at a fifth-grade reading level. Of these items, 76% were from the four previous 16PF editions, although many of them were re-written to simplify or update the language. The item content typically sounds non-threatening and asks simple questions about daily behavior, interests, and opinions.

Item format

A characteristic of the 16PF items is that, rather than asking respondents to self-assess their personality as some instruments do (e.g., "I am a warm and friendly person; I am not a worrier; I am an even tempered person."), they tend instead to ask about daily, concrete situations, e.g.:

  • When I find myself in a boring situation, I usually "tune out" and daydream about other things. True/False.
  • When a bit of tact and convincing is needed to get people moving, I'm usually the one who does it. True/False.

Cattell argued that self-ratings relate to self-image, and are affected by self-awareness, and defensiveness about one's actual traits. The 16PF provides scores on 16 primary personality scales and five global personality scales, all of which are bi-polar (both ends of each scale have a distinct, meaningful definition). The instrument also includes three validity scales:

  • a bi-polar Impression Management (IM) scale,
  • an Acquiescence (ACQ) scale, and
  • an Infrequency (INF) scale.

The Impression Management (IM) scale is a bipolar scale with high scores reflecting a preponderance of socially desirable responses and low scores reflecting a preponderance of socially undesirable responses. Possible reasons for an extremely high Impression Management score include: the examinee may actually behave in highly socially desirable ways, and responses are accurate self-descriptions; responses reflect an unconscious distortion consistent with the examinee's self-image but not with their behavior; or deliberate self-presentation as behaving in a highly socially desirable manner. A low impression management score suggests an unusual willingness to admit undesirable attributes or behaviors and can occur when an examinee is unusually self-critical, discouraged, or under stress.

The Acquiescence (ACQ) scale's purpose is to index the degree to which the examinee agreed with items regardless of what was being asked. A high score might indicate that the examinee misunderstood the item content, responded randomly, has an unclear self-image, or had a "yea-saying" response style.

The Infrequency (INF) scale comprises the most statistically infrequent responses on the test, which are all middle (b) responses and appear in the test booklet with a question mark. A score above the 95th percentile may indicate that the examinee had trouble reading or comprehending the questions, responded randomly, experienced consistent indecisiveness about the a or c response choice, or tried to avoid making the wrong impression by choosing the middle answer rather than one of the more definitive answers.

Administration

Administration of the test takes about 35–50 minutes for the paper-and-pencil version and about 30 minutes by computer. The test instructions are simple and straightforward and the test is un-timed; thus, the test is generally self-administrable and can be used in either an individual or a group setting. The 16PF test was designed for adults at least age 16 and older, but there are also parallel tests for various younger age ranges (e.g., the 16PF Adolescent Personality Questionnaire[14]).

The 16PF Questionnaire has been translated into more than 30 languages and dialects.[13] Thus the test can be administered in different languages, scored based on either local, national, or international normative samples, and computerized interpretive reports provided in about 23 different languages. The test has generally been culturally adapted (rather than just translated) in these countries, with local standardization samples plus reliability and validity information collected locally and presented in individual manuals.

Scoring

The test can be hand-scored using a set of scoring keys, or computer-scored by mailing-in or faxing-in the answer sheet to the publisher IPAT. There is also a software system that can be used to administer, score, and provide reports on the test results directly in the professional's office; and an Internet-based system that can also provide administration, scoring, and reports in a range of different languages.

After the test has been administered there is a total score computed from each of the 16 personality factors. These totals have been created in a way to correlate to the sten scale.[28] Scores on the 16PF are presented on a 10-point scale, or standard-ten scale. The sten scale has a mean of 5.5 and a standard deviation of 2, with scores below 4 considered low and scores above 7 considered high.[29] The sten scales are bipolar, meaning that each end of the scale has a distinct definition and meaning. Because bipolar scales are designated with "high" or "low" for each factor, a high score should not be considered to reflect a positive personality characteristic and a low score should not be considered to reflect a negative personality characteristic.

Interpretation

Cattell and Schuerger provided six steps that outline how they recommend interpreting the results of the 16PF:[30]

  1. Consider the context of the assessment.
  2. Evaluate the Response Style Indexes by first checking responses on Factor B, and then looking at scores on the Infrequency, Impression Management, and Acquiescence scales.
  3. Evaluate the Global Scale scores.
  4. Evaluate the Primary Scales in the context of the Global Scales
  5. Consider scale interactions
  6. Integrate 16PF results in relation to the assessment question

There are about a dozen computer-generated interpretive reports that can be used to help interpret the test for different purposes, for example:

  • Career Development Report
  • Karson Clinical Report
  • Cattell Comprehensive Personality Interpretation
  • Teamwork Development Report,
  • Management Potential Report,
  • Security Selection Report
  • Leadership Coaching Report

There are also many books that help with test interpretation, for example,

  • 16PF Interpretation in Clinical Practice (Karson, Karson, & O'Dell, 1997),[31]
  • The 16PF: Personality in Depth (Cattell, H.B., 1989),[32] and
  • Essentials of the 16PF (Cattell, H.E. & Schuerger, J.M, 2003)[33]

The 16PF traits are also included in the Psychological Evaluation Questionnaire (PEQ), which combines measures of both normal and abnormal personality traits into one test (Cattell, Cattell, Cattell, Russell, & Bedwell, 2003)[30]

Raymond Cattell's 16 Personality Factors

Below is a table outlining the personality traits measured by the 16PF Questionnaire.

Descriptors of low range Primary factor Descriptors of high range
Impersonal, distant, cool, reserved, detached, formal, aloof Warmth
(A)
Warm, outgoing, attentive to others, kindly, easygoing, participating, likes people
Concrete-thinking, less intelligent, lower general mental capacity, unable to handle abstract problems Reasoning
(B)
Abstract-thinking, more intelligent, bright, higher general mental capacity, fast-learner
Reactive emotionally, changeable, affected by feelings, emotionally less stable, easily upset Emotional Stability
(C)
Emotionally stable, adaptive, mature, faces reality calmly
Deferential, cooperative, avoids conflict, submissive, humble, obedient, easily led, docile, accommodating Dominance
(E)
Dominant, forceful, assertive, aggressive, competitive, stubborn, bossy
Serious, restrained, prudent, taciturn, introspective, silent Liveliness
(F)
Lively, animated, spontaneous, enthusiastic, happy-go-lucky, cheerful, expressive, impulsive
Expedient, nonconforming, disregards rules, self-indulgent Rule-Consciousness
(G)
Rule-conscious, dutiful, conscientious, conforming, moralistic, staid, rule-bound
Shy, threat-sensitive, timid, hesitant, intimidated Social Boldness
(H)
Socially bold, venturesome, thick-skinned, uninhibited
Utilitarian, objective, unsentimental, tough-minded, self-reliant, no-nonsense, rough Sensitivity
(I)
Sensitive, aesthetic, sentimental, tender-minded, intuitive, refined
Trusting, unsuspecting, accepting, unconditional, easy Vigilance
(L)
Vigilant, suspicious, skeptical, distrustful, oppositional
Grounded, practical, prosaic, solution oriented, steady, conventional Abstractedness
(M)
Abstract, imaginative, absentminded, impractical, absorbed in ideas
Forthright, genuine, artless, open, guileless, naive, unpretentious, involved Privateness
(N)
Private, discreet, nondisclosing, shrewd, polished, worldly, astute, diplomatic
Self-assured, unworried, complacent, secure, free of guilt, confident, self-satisfied Apprehension
(O)
Apprehensive, self-doubting, worried, guilt-prone, insecure, worrying, self-blaming
Traditional, attached to familiar, conservative, respecting traditional ideas Openness to Change
(Q1)
Open to change, experimental, liberal, analytical, critical, freethinking, flexibility
Group-oriented, affiliative, a joiner and follower dependent Self-Reliance
(Q2)
Self-reliant, solitary, resourceful, individualistic, self-sufficient
Tolerates disorder, unexacting, flexible, undisciplined, lax, self-conflict, impulsive, careless of social rules, uncontrolled Perfectionism
(Q3)
Perfectionistic, organized, compulsive, self-disciplined, socially precise, exacting will power, control, self-sentimental
Relaxed, placid, tranquil, torpid, patient, composed low drive Tension
(Q4)
Tense, high-energy, impatient, driven, frustrated, over-wrought, time-driven
Primary Factors and Descriptors in Cattell's 16 Personality Factor Model (Adapted from Conn & Rieke, 1994).

Relationship to five-factor models

In the Fourth and Fifth Editions of the 16PF, there were five global factors that seem to correspond fairly closely to the "Big Five personality traits".[34] The Big Five (BF) trait of Openness seems to be related to 16PF Openness/Tough-mindedness, The BF trait of Conscientiousness to the 16PF Self-Control, the BF Extraversion to the 16PF Extraversion, the BF Agreeableness/Dis-Agreeableness to the 16PF Independence/Accommodation, and the BF Neuroticism to the 16PF Anxiety.[35] In fact, the development of the Big-Five factors began in 1963 with W.T. Norman factor-analyzing responses to the same items as the 16PF, replicating Cattell's work and suggested that five factors would be sufficient.[36]

However, one big technical difference between Cattell's five Global Factors and popular five-factor models was Cattell's insistence on using oblique rotation in the factor analysis whereas Goldberg and Costa & McCrae used orthogonal rotation in their factor analysis. Oblique rotation allows the factors to correlate with each other, whereas orthogonal rotation restricts the factors from correlating with each other. Although personality traits are thought to be correlated, using orthogonal factor analysis makes the factors easier to understand and to work on statistically in research. This is one of the reasons the Big-Five traits have definitions that are different from the 16PF global factors. For example, as seen in the table below, in Cattell's model the primary personality trait of Dominance (Factor E) is strongly located in the Independence/Accommodation global factor which represents a quality of fearless, original thinking and forceful, independent actions. However, other popular big five models consider Dominance as a facet of several Big-Five traits, including Extraversion, Dis-Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness. Thus Dominance is spread across a range of Big-Five factors with little influence on any one (Cattell & Mead, 2008). Below is a table that shows how the 16 primary factors are related to the five global factors of the 16 Personality Factor theory. Compare with the Hierarchical Structure of the Big Five. Also, note that factor B is considered separate from the other factors because it is not a part of the hierarchical structure of personality in the same way as the other factors.[citation needed]

Factor analytic strategy

Assumptions shared by standardized personality tests, simply stated, are that humans possess characteristics or traits that are stable, vary from individual to individual, and can be measured.[37][38] Factor analysis is a statistical procedure for reducing the redundancy in a set of intercorrelated scores. One major technique of factor analysis, the principal-components method, finds the minimum number of common factors that can account for an interrelated set of scores.[37][39] Cattell's goal was to empirically determine and measure the essence of personality.[37] Cattell used factor analysis to reduce thousands of psychological traits into what he believed to be 16 of the basic dimensions, or source traits of human personality. As a result, he created the 16PF personality test.[37][38]

16PF global and primary factors

Introversion/Extroversion Low Anxiety/High Anxiety Receptivity/Tough-Mindedness Accommodation/Independence Lack of Restraint/Self-Control
A: Reserved/Warm C: Emotionally Stable/Reactive A: Warm/Reserved E: Deferential/Dominant F: Serious/Lively B: Problem-Solving
F: Serious/Lively L: Trusting/Vigilant I: Sensitive/Unsentimental H: Shy/Bold G: Expedient/Rule-Conscious
H: Shy/Bold O: Self-Assured/Apprehensive M: Abstracted/Practical L: Trusting/Vigilant M: Abstracted/Practical
N: Private/Forthright Q4: Relaxed/Tense Q1: Open-to-Change/Traditional Q1: Traditional/Open-to-Change Q3: Tolerates Disorder/Perfectionistic
Q2: Self-Reliant/Group-Oriented

History and development

Cattell physical sciences background

The 16PF Questionnaire was created from a fairly unusual perspective among personality tests. Most personality tests are developed to measure just the pre-conceived traits that are of interest to a particular theorist or researcher. The main author of the 16PF, Raymond B. Cattell, had a strong background in the physical sciences, especially chemistry and physics, at a time when the basic elements of the physical world were being discovered, placed in the periodic table, and used as the basis for understanding the fundamental nature of the physical world and for further inquiry. From this background in the physical sciences, Cattell developed the belief that all fields are best understood by first seeking to find the fundamental underlying elements in that domain, and then developing a valid way to measure and research these elements (Cattell, 1965).[40]

Personality research author Schuerger stated that:

Cattell's goal in creating the 16PF Questionnaire was to provide a thorough, research-based map of normal personality.[41]

When Cattell moved from the physical sciences into the field of psychology in the 1920s, he described his disappointment about finding that it consisted largely of a wide array of abstract, unrelated theories and concepts that had little or no scientific bases. He found that most personality theories were based on philosophy and on personal conjecture, or were developed by medical professionals, such as Jean Charcot and Sigmund Freud, who relied on their personal intuition to reconstruct what they felt was going on inside people, based on observing individuals with serious psycho-pathological problems. Cattell (1957)[4] described the concerns he felt as a scientist:

"In psychology there is an ocean of spawning intuitions and comfortable assumptions which we share with the layman, and out of which we climb with difficulty to the plateaus of scientific objectivity....Scientific advance hinges on the introduction of measurement to the field under investigation….Psychology has bypassed the necessary descriptive, taxonomic, and metric stages through which all healthy sciences first must pass….If Aristotle and other philosophers could get no further by sheer power of reasoning in two thousand years of observation, it is unlikely that we shall do so now.... For psychology to take its place as an effective science, we must become less concerned with grandiose theory than with establishing, through research, certain basic laws of relationship." (p.3-5)

Thus, Cattell's goal in creating the 16PF Questionnaire was to discover the number and nature of the fundamental traits of human personality and to develop a way to measure these dimensions. At the University of London, Cattell worked with Charles Spearman who was developing factor analysis to aid in his quest to discover the basic factors of human ability. Cattell thought that could also be applied to the area of personality. He reasoned that human personality must have basic, underlying, universal dimensions just as the physical world had basic building blocks (like oxygen and hydrogen). He felt that if the basic building blocks of personality were discovered and measured, then human behavior (e.g., creativity, leadership, altruism, or aggression) could become increasingly understandable and predictable.

Lexical Hypothesis (1936)

In 1936 Gordon Allport and H.S. Odbert hypothesized that:

Those individual differences that are most salient and socially relevant in people's lives will eventually become encoded into their language; the more important such a difference, the more likely is it to become expressed as a single word.

This statement has become known as the Lexical Hypothesis, which posits that if there is a word for a trait, it must be a real trait. Allport and Odbert used this hypothesis to identify personality traits by working through two of the most comprehensive dictionaries of the English language available at the time, and extracting 18,000 personality-describing words. From this gigantic list they extracted 4500 personality-describing adjectives which they considered to describe observable and relatively permanent traits.

Cattell and his colleagues began a comprehensive program of international research aimed at identifying and mapping out the basic underlying dimensions of personality. Their goal was to systematically measure the widest possible range of personality concepts, in a belief that "all aspects of human personality which are or have been of importance, interest, or utility have already become recorded in the substance of language" (Cattell, R. B., 1943, p. 483).[42] They wanted to include every known personality dimension in their investigation, and thus began with the largest existing compilation of personality traits (Allport and Odbert, 1936).[43] Over time, they used factor analysis to reduce the massive list of traits by analyzing the underlying patterns among them. They studied personality data from different sources (e.g. objective measures of daily behavior, interpersonal ratings, and questionnaire results), and measured these traits in diverse populations, including working adults, university students, and military personnel. (Cattell, 1957, 1973).[4][44]

16 Personality Factors identified (1949)

The 16 Personality Factors were identified in 1949 by Raymond Cattell.[45] He believed that in order to adequately map out personality, one had to utilize L-Data (life records or observation), Q data (information from questionnaires), and T-data (information from objective tests).[46] The development of the 16PF Questionnaire, although confusingly named, was an attempt to develop an adequate measure of T-data.

Cattell analyzed the list of 4500 adjectives and organized the list of adjectives into fewer than 171 items and asked subjects to rate people whom they knew on each of the adjectives on the list (an example of L-data because the information was gathered from observers). This allowed Cattell to narrow down to 35 terms and factor analysis in 1945, 1947 and 1948 revealed a 11 or 12 factor solution.[47][48][49]

In 1949 Cattell found that there were 4 additional factors, which he believed consisted of information that could only be provided through self-rating. This process allowed the use of ratings by observers, questionnaires, and objective measurements of actual behavior.[44][50][51] In 1952 the ILLIAC I became available at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to be used for factor analysis.[52]

Together the original 12 factors and the 4 covert factors made up the original 16 primary personality factors.[53] As the five factor theory gained traction and research on the 16 factors continued, subsequent analysis identified five factors underlying the 16 factors. Cattell called these global factors.

The 16PF factorial structure resembles that of Szondi test and the Berufsbilder test (BTT), despite being based on different theories.[54]

Analytic study and revisions of the factors (1949–2011)

Because the 16PF dimensions were developed through factor analysis, construct validity is provided by studies that confirm its factor structure. Over several decades of factor-analytic study, Cattell and his colleagues gradually refined and validated their list of underlying source traits. The search resulted in the sixteen unitary traits of the 16PF Questionnaire. These traits have remained the same over the last 50 years of research. In addition, the 16PF Questionnaire traits are part of a multi-variate personality model that provides a broader framework including developmental, environmental, and hereditary patterns of the traits and how they change across the life span (Cattell, 1973, 1979, 1980).[55][56]

The validity of the factor structure of the 16PF Questionnaire (the 16 primary factors and 5 global factors) has been supported by more than 60 published studies (Cattell & Krug, 1986; Conn & Rieke, 1994; Hofer and Eber, 2002).[57][58][59] Research has also supported the comprehensiveness of the 16PF traits: all dimensions on other major personality tests (e.g., the NEO Personality Inventory, the California Psychological Inventory, the Personality Research Form, and the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator) have been found to be contained within the 16PF scales in regression and factor-analytic studies (Conn & Rieke, 1994; Cattell, 1996).[34]

Since its release in 1949, the 16PF Questionnaire has been revised four times: once in 1956, once in 1962, once in 1968, and the current version was developed in 1993. The US version of the test was also re-standardized in 2002, along with the development of forms for children and teenagers; versions for the UK, Ireland, France and the Netherlands were re-standardised in 2011. Additionally, there is a shortened form available primarily for employee selection and the questionnaire has been adapted into more than 35 languages. The questionnaire has also been validated in a range of international cultures over time[dubious ].[60][61][62]

The 16PF was distributed through the Institute for Personality and Ability Testing (IPAT), founded by Cattell and based in Savoy, Illinois.[63] In January 2003, the Institute was purchased by UK private company, OPP Limited, who administered the 16PF worldwide.[63] It later became a subsidiary of Performance Assessment Network (PAN)[64] which in 2017 was acquired by PSI.[65]

The original Big Five traits

From the beginning of his research, Cattell found personality traits to have a multi-level, hierarchical structure (Cattell, 1946).[4][66] The first goal of these researchers was to find the most fundamental primary traits of personality. Next they factor-analyzed these numerous primary traits to see if these traits had a structure of their own—i.e. if some of them naturally went together in self-defining, meaningful groupings.

They consistently found that the primary traits themselves came together in particular, meaningful groupings to form broader secondary or global traits, each with its own particular focus and function within personality (Cattell & Schuerger, 2003). For example, the first global trait they found was Extraversion-Introversion. It resulted from the natural affinity of five primary traits that defined different reasons for an individual to move toward versus away from other people (see below). They found that there was a natural tendency for these traits to go together in the real world, and to define an important domain of human behavior—social behavior. This global factor Global Extraversion/Introversion (the tendency to move toward versus away from interaction with others) is composed from the following primary traits:

  • Warmth (Factor A): the tendency to move toward others seeking closeness and connection because of genuine feelings of caring, sympathy, and concern (versus the tendency to be reserved and detached, and thus be independent and unemotional).
  • Liveliness (Factor F): the tendency to be high-energy, fun-loving, and carefree, and to spontaneously move towards others in an animated, stimulating manner. Low-scorers tend to be more serious and self-restrained, and to be cautious, unrushed, and judicious.
  • Social Boldness (Factor H): the tendency to seek social interaction in a confident, fearless manner, enjoying challenges, risks, and being the center of attention. Low-scorers tend to be shy and timid, and to be more modest and risk-avoidant.
  • Forthrightness (Factor N): the tendency to want to be known by others—to be open, forthright, and genuine in social situations, and thus to be self-revealing and unguarded. Low-scorers tend to be more private and unself-revealing, and to be harder to get to know.
  • Affiliative (Factor Q2): the tendency to seek companionship and enjoy belonging to and functioning in a group (inclusive, cooperative, good follower, willing to compromise). Low-scorers tend to be more individualistic and self-reliant and to value their autonomy.

In a similar manner, these researchers found that four other primary traits consistently merged to define another global factor which they called Receptivity or Openness (versus Tough-Mindedness). This factor was made up of four primary traits that describe different kinds of openness to the world:

  • Openness to sensitive feelings, emotions, intuition, and aesthetic dimensions (Sensitivity – Factor I)
  • Openness to abstract, theoretical ideas, conceptual thinking, and imagination (Abstractedness – Factor M)
  • Openness to free thinking, inquiry, exploration of new approaches, and innovative solutions (Openness-to-Change – Factor Q1) and
  • Openness to people and their feelings (Warmth – Factor A).

Another global factor, Self-Controlled (or conscientious) versus Unrestrained, resulted from the natural coming together of four primary factors that define the different ways that human beings manage to control their behavior:

  • Rule-Consciousness (Factor G) involves adopting and conscientiously following society's accepted standards of behavior
  • Perfectionism (Factor Q3) describes a tendency to be self-disciplined, organized, thorough, attentive to detail, and goal-oriented
  • Seriousness (Factor F) involves a tendency to be cautious, reflective, self-restrained, and deliberate in making decisions; and
  • Groundedness (Factor M) involves a tendency to stay focused on concrete, pragmatic, realistic solutions.

Because the global factors were developed by factor-analyzing the primary traits, the meanings of the global traits were determined by the primary traits which made them up. In addition, then the global factors provide the overarching, conceptual framework for understanding the meaning and function of each of the primary traits. Thus, the two levels of personality are essentially inter-connected and inter-related.

However it is the primary traits that provide a clear definition of the individual's unique personality. Two people might have exactly the same level of Extraversion, but still be quite different from each other. For example, they may both be at the 80% on Extraversion, and both tend to move toward others to the same degree, but they may be doing it for quite different reasons. One person might achieve an 80% on Extraversion by being high on Social Boldness (Factor H: confident, bold, talkative, adventurous, fearless attention-seeking) and on Liveliness (Factor F: high-energy, enthusiastic, fun-loving, impulsive), but Reserved (low on Factor A: detached, cool, unfeeling, objective). This individual would be talkative, bold, and impulsive but not very sensitive to others people's needs or feelings. The second Extravert might be high on Warmth (Factor A: kind, soft-hearted, caring and nurturing), and Group-Oriented (low Factor Q2: companionable, cooperative, and participating), but Shy (low on Factor H: timid, modest, and easily embarrassed). This second Extravert would tend to show quite different social behavior and be caring, considerate, and attentive to others but not forward, bold or loud—and thus have quite a different effect on his/her social environment.

Today, the global traits of personality are commonly known as the Big Five. The Big Five traits are most important for getting an abstract, theoretical understanding of the big, overarching domains of personality, and in understanding how different traits of personality relate to each other and how different research findings relate to each other. The big-five are important for understanding and interpreting an individual's personality profile mainly in getting a broad overview of their personality make-up at the highest level of personality organization. However, it is still the scores on the more specific primary traits that define the rich, unique personality make-up of any individual. These more-numerous primary traits have repeatedly been found to be the most powerful in predicting and understanding the complexity of actual daily behavior (Ashton, 1998; Goldberg, 1999; Mershon & Gorsuch, 1988; Paunonen & Ashton, 2001).[67][68][69][70]

Key features

  • 16PF is one of the world's most examined personality tests.[71]
  • The 16PF assessment is easy to administer, requiring only 35 to 50 minutes to complete.
  • Five distinct report options give the 16PF test utility in a wide variety of settings.
  • Because the relationship between the test items and the traits measured by the 16PF instrument is not obvious, it is difficult for the test-taker to deliberately tailor responses to achieve a desired outcome.
  • The Couple's Counseling Report includes an easy-to-understand narrative summary of results to share with the couple.[38]

See also

References

  1. ^ Karson, W & J. W O'Dell.(1976). A Guide to the Clinical Use of the 16PF. University of Michigan Press.[page needed]
  2. ^ Schuerger, J.M. (March 1995). "Career Assessment and The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire". Journal of Career Assessment. 3 (2): 157–175. doi:10.1177/106907279500300204. S2CID 143342751.
  3. ^ Cattell, R. B. (1978). Use of Factor Analysis in Behavioral and Life Sciences. New York: Plenum.[page needed]
  4. ^ a b c d Cattell, R. B. (1957). Personality and Motivation Structure and Measurement. New York: World Book.[page needed]
  5. ^ Boyle, Gregory J. (January 1989). "Re-examination of the major personality-type factors in the Cattell, Comrey and Eysenck scales: Were the factor solutions by Noller et al. optimal?". Personality and Individual Differences. 10 (12): 1289–1299. doi:10.1016/0191-8869(89)90241-9.
  6. ^ Cattell, R. B. (1995). "The fallacy of five factors in the personality sphere". The Psychologist. 8 (5): 207–208.
  7. ^ Boyle, G. J. (2008). Critique of Five-Factor Model (FFM). In G.J. Boyle, G. Matthews, & D.H. Saklofske (Eds.), The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment: Vol. 1 - Personality Theories and Models. Los Angeles, CA: Sage. ISBN 1-4129-2365-4
  8. ^ Cattell, R. B. (1973). Personality and Mood by Questionnaire. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.[page needed]
  9. ^ Cattell, H. E. P. & Mead, A. D. (2008). The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (16PF). In G.J. Boyle, G. Matthews, & D.H. Saklofske (Eds), The Sage Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment: Vol. 2, Personality Measurement and Testing., Los Angeles, CA: Sage.[page needed]
  10. ^ Boyle, G. J. (2008). Simplifying the Cattellian psychometric model. In G. J. Boyle, G. Matthews, & D. H. Saklofske. (Eds.), The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment: Vol. 1 - Personality Theories and Models. Los Angeles, CA: Sage Publishers. ISBN 1-4129-2365-4
  11. ^ Cattell, Raymond B.; Boyle, Gregory J.; Chant, David (2002). . Psychological Review. 109 (1): 202–205. doi:10.1037/0033-295X.109.1.202. PMID 11863038. Archived from the original on 2011-04-13. Retrieved 2020-11-13.
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  15. ^ Porter, R. B. & Cattell, R. B. (1985). Handbook for the Children's Personality Questionnaire (CPQ), Champaign, IL: IPAT.[page needed]
  16. ^ Coan, Richard W.; Cattell, Raymond B. (December 1959). "The Development of the Early School Personality Questionnaire". The Journal of Experimental Education. 28 (2): 143–152. doi:10.1080/00220973.1959.11010646.
  17. ^ Lichtenstein, Don; Dreger, Ralph Mason; Cattell, Raymond B (1 April 1986). "Factor Structure and Standardization of the Preschool Personality Questionnaire". Journal of Social Behavior and Personality. 1 (2): 165–182. ProQuest 1292282028.
  18. ^ Hakstian, A. R. & Cattell, R. B. (1982). Manual for the Comprehensive Ability Battery. Champaign, IL: IPAT.[page needed]
  19. ^ Cattell, R. B. & Cattell, A. K. S. (1973). Measuring intelligence with the Culture Fair Tests. Champaign, IL: IPAT.[page needed]
  20. ^ Cattell, R. B., Horn, J. L., Sweney, A. B., & Radcliffe, J. (1964). Handbook for the Motivation Analysis Test (MAT), Champaign IL: IPAT.[page needed]
  21. ^ Krug, S. E., Cattell, R. B., & Sweney, A. B. (1976). Handbook for the School Motivation Analysis Test (SMAT). Champaign, IL: IPAT.[page needed]
  22. ^ Cattell, R. B. et al. (1982). The Children's Motivation Analysis Test (CMAT). Champaign, IL: IPAT.[page needed]
  23. ^ Boyle, Gregory J.; Richards, Lisa M.; Baglioni, Anthony J. (December 1993). . Personality and Individual Differences. 15 (6): 637–643. doi:10.1016/0191-8869(93)90005-N. Archived from the original on 2017-09-22. Retrieved 2020-11-13.
  24. ^ Curran, J. P. & Cattell, R. B. (1976). Manual for the Eight State Questionnaire (8SQ). Champaign, IL: IPAT.[page needed]
  25. ^ Cattell, R. B., Cattell, A. K., & Cattell, H. E. P. (1993). 16PF Fifth Edition Questionnaire. Champaign, IL: IPAT.[page needed]
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  31. ^ Karson, M., Karson, S., & O'Dell, J.W. (1997).
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  34. ^ a b Cattell, H.E.P. (1996). "The original big-five: A historical perspective". European Review of Psychology. 46 (1): 5–14.
  35. ^ Conn, S.R., & Rieke, M.L. (1994). The 16PF Fifth Edition technical manual. Champaign, IL: Institute for Personality and Ability Testing, Inc.
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  42. ^ Cattell, Raymond B. (1943). "The description of personality: basic traits resolved into clusters". The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology. 38 (4): 476–506. doi:10.1037/h0054116.
  43. ^ Allport, Gordon W.; Odbert, Henry S. (1936). "Trait-names: A psycho-lexical study". Psychological Monographs. 47 (1): i–171. doi:10.1037/h0093360.
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  54. ^ Welter, Giselle Müller-Roger; Capitão, Claudio Garcia (2009). "Professional tendency and personality: research on the correlation among measures of these constructs". Psicologia: Ciência e Profissão. 29 (3): 588–601. doi:10.1590/S1414-98932009000300012.
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  59. ^ Hofer, Scott M.; Eber, Herbert W. (2002). "Second-order factor structure of the Cattell Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire". In de Raad, Boele; Perugini, Marco (eds.). Big Five Assessment. Hogrefe & Huber. pp. 397–404. ISBN 978-0-88937-242-9.
  60. ^ Cattell, Heather E.P.; Mead, Alan D. (2008). "The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (16PF)". In Boyle, Gregory J.; Matthews, Gerald; Saklofske, Donald H. (eds.). The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment: Volume 2 — Personality Measurement and Testing. pp. 135–159. doi:10.4135/9781849200479.n7. ISBN 978-1-4129-4652-0.
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Further reading

  • Gregory, Robert J. (2011). Psychological Testing: History, Principles, and Applications (Sixth ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon. ISBN 978-0-205-78214-7.

External links

16pf, questionnaire, sixteen, personality, factor, questionnaire, 16pf, self, report, personality, test, developed, over, several, decades, empirical, research, raymond, cattell, maurice, tatsuoka, herbert, eber, 16pf, provides, measure, personality, also, use. The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire 16PF is a self report personality test developed over several decades of empirical research by Raymond B Cattell Maurice Tatsuoka and Herbert Eber The 16PF provides a measure of personality and can also be used by psychologists and other mental health professionals as a clinical instrument to help diagnose psychiatric disorders and help with prognosis and therapy planning The 16PF can also provide information relevant to the clinical and counseling process such as an individual s capacity for insight self esteem cognitive style internalization of standards openness to change capacity for empathy level of interpersonal trust quality of attachments interpersonal needs attitude toward authority reaction toward dynamics of power frustration tolerance and coping style Thus the 16PF instrument provides clinicians with a normal range measurement of anxiety adjustment emotional stability and behavioral problems Clinicians can use 16PF results to identify effective strategies for establishing a working alliance to develop a therapeutic plan and to select effective therapeutic interventions or modes of treatment 1 It can also be used within other areas of psychology such as career and occupational selection 2 16PF QuestionnaireMeSHD002416Beginning in the 1940s Cattell used several techniques including the new statistical technique of common factor analysis applied to the English language trait lexicon to elucidate the major underlying dimensions within the normal personality sphere This method takes as its starting point the matrix of inter correlations between these variables in an attempt to uncover the underlying source traits of human personality 3 Cattell found that personality structure was hierarchical with both primary and secondary stratum level traits 4 At the primary level the 16PF measures 16 primary trait constructs with a version of the Big Five secondary traits at the secondary level 5 6 7 These higher level factors emerged from factor analyzing the 16 x 16 intercorrelation matrix for the sixteen primary factors themselves The 16PF yields scores on primary and second order global traits thereby allowing a multilevel description of each individual s unique personality profile A listing of these trait dimensions and their description can be found below Cattell also found a third stratum of personality organization that comprised just two overarching factors 8 9 The measurement of normal personality trait constructs is an integral part of Cattell s comprehensive theory of intrapersonal psychological variables covering individual differences in cognitive abilities normal personality traits abnormal psychopathological personality traits dynamic motivational traits mood states and transitory emotional states 10 which are all taken into account in his behavioral specification prediction equation 11 The 16PF has also been translated into over 30 languages and dialects and is widely used internationally 12 13 Cattell and his co workers also constructed downward extensions of the 16PF parallel personality questionnaires designed to measure corresponding trait constructs in younger age ranges such as the High School Personality Questionnaire HSPQ now the Adolescent Personality Questionnaire APQ for ages 12 to 18 years 14 the Children s Personality Questionnaire CPQ 15 the Early School Personality Questionnaire ESPQ 16 as well as the Preschool Personality Questionnaire PSPQ 17 Cattell also constructed T data tests of cognitive abilities such as the Comprehensive Ability Battery CAB a multidimensional measure of 20 primary cognitive abilities 18 as well as measures of non verbal visuo spatial abilities such as the three scales of the Culture Fair Intelligence Test CFIT 19 In addition Cattell and his colleagues constructed objective T data measures of dynamic motivational traits including the Motivation Analysis Test MAT 20 the School Motivation Analysis Test SMAT 21 as well as the Children s Motivation Analysis Test CMAT 22 23 As for the mood state domain Cattell and his colleagues constructed the Eight State Questionnaire 8SQ a self report Q data measure of eight clinically important emotional mood states labeled Anxiety Stress Depression Regression Fatigue Guilt Extraversion and Arousal 24 Contents 1 Outline 1 1 Item format 1 2 Administration 1 3 Scoring 1 4 Interpretation 2 Raymond Cattell s 16 Personality Factors 3 Relationship to five factor models 4 Factor analytic strategy 5 16PF global and primary factors 6 History and development 6 1 Cattell physical sciences background 6 2 Lexical Hypothesis 1936 6 3 16 Personality Factors identified 1949 6 4 Analytic study and revisions of the factors 1949 2011 7 The original Big Five traits 8 Key features 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksOutline EditThe most recent edition of the Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire 16PF released in 1993 is the fifth edition 16PF5e of the original instrument 25 26 The self report instrument was first published in 1949 the second and third editions were published in 1956 and 1962 respectively and the five alternative forms of the fourth edition were released between 1967 and 1969 27 The goal of the fifth edition revision in 1993 was to update improve and simplify the language used in the test items simplify the answer format develop new validity scales improve the psychometric properties of the test including new reliability and validity data and develop a new standardization sample of 10 000 people to reflect the current U S Census population The 16PF Fifth Edition contains 185 multiple choice items which are written at a fifth grade reading level Of these items 76 were from the four previous 16PF editions although many of them were re written to simplify or update the language The item content typically sounds non threatening and asks simple questions about daily behavior interests and opinions Item format Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A characteristic of the 16PF items is that rather than asking respondents to self assess their personality as some instruments do e g I am a warm and friendly person I am not a worrier I am an even tempered person they tend instead to ask about daily concrete situations e g When I find myself in a boring situation I usually tune out and daydream about other things True False When a bit of tact and convincing is needed to get people moving I m usually the one who does it True False Cattell argued that self ratings relate to self image and are affected by self awareness and defensiveness about one s actual traits The 16PF provides scores on 16 primary personality scales and five global personality scales all of which are bi polar both ends of each scale have a distinct meaningful definition The instrument also includes three validity scales a bi polar Impression Management IM scale an Acquiescence ACQ scale and an Infrequency INF scale The Impression Management IM scale is a bipolar scale with high scores reflecting a preponderance of socially desirable responses and low scores reflecting a preponderance of socially undesirable responses Possible reasons for an extremely high Impression Management score include the examinee may actually behave in highly socially desirable ways and responses are accurate self descriptions responses reflect an unconscious distortion consistent with the examinee s self image but not with their behavior or deliberate self presentation as behaving in a highly socially desirable manner A low impression management score suggests an unusual willingness to admit undesirable attributes or behaviors and can occur when an examinee is unusually self critical discouraged or under stress The Acquiescence ACQ scale s purpose is to index the degree to which the examinee agreed with items regardless of what was being asked A high score might indicate that the examinee misunderstood the item content responded randomly has an unclear self image or had a yea saying response style The Infrequency INF scale comprises the most statistically infrequent responses on the test which are all middle b responses and appear in the test booklet with a question mark A score above the 95th percentile may indicate that the examinee had trouble reading or comprehending the questions responded randomly experienced consistent indecisiveness about the a or c response choice or tried to avoid making the wrong impression by choosing the middle answer rather than one of the more definitive answers Administration Edit Administration of the test takes about 35 50 minutes for the paper and pencil version and about 30 minutes by computer The test instructions are simple and straightforward and the test is un timed thus the test is generally self administrable and can be used in either an individual or a group setting The 16PF test was designed for adults at least age 16 and older but there are also parallel tests for various younger age ranges e g the 16PF Adolescent Personality Questionnaire 14 The 16PF Questionnaire has been translated into more than 30 languages and dialects 13 Thus the test can be administered in different languages scored based on either local national or international normative samples and computerized interpretive reports provided in about 23 different languages The test has generally been culturally adapted rather than just translated in these countries with local standardization samples plus reliability and validity information collected locally and presented in individual manuals Scoring Edit The test can be hand scored using a set of scoring keys or computer scored by mailing in or faxing in the answer sheet to the publisher IPAT There is also a software system that can be used to administer score and provide reports on the test results directly in the professional s office and an Internet based system that can also provide administration scoring and reports in a range of different languages After the test has been administered there is a total score computed from each of the 16 personality factors These totals have been created in a way to correlate to the sten scale 28 Scores on the 16PF are presented on a 10 point scale or standard ten scale The sten scale has a mean of 5 5 and a standard deviation of 2 with scores below 4 considered low and scores above 7 considered high 29 The sten scales are bipolar meaning that each end of the scale has a distinct definition and meaning Because bipolar scales are designated with high or low for each factor a high score should not be considered to reflect a positive personality characteristic and a low score should not be considered to reflect a negative personality characteristic Interpretation Edit Cattell and Schuerger provided six steps that outline how they recommend interpreting the results of the 16PF 30 Consider the context of the assessment Evaluate the Response Style Indexes by first checking responses on Factor B and then looking at scores on the Infrequency Impression Management and Acquiescence scales Evaluate the Global Scale scores Evaluate the Primary Scales in the context of the Global Scales Consider scale interactions Integrate 16PF results in relation to the assessment questionThere are about a dozen computer generated interpretive reports that can be used to help interpret the test for different purposes for example Career Development Report Karson Clinical Report Cattell Comprehensive Personality Interpretation Teamwork Development Report Management Potential Report Security Selection Report Leadership Coaching ReportThere are also many books that help with test interpretation for example 16PF Interpretation in Clinical Practice Karson Karson amp O Dell 1997 31 The 16PF Personality in Depth Cattell H B 1989 32 and Essentials of the 16PF Cattell H E amp Schuerger J M 2003 33 The 16PF traits are also included in the Psychological Evaluation Questionnaire PEQ which combines measures of both normal and abnormal personality traits into one test Cattell Cattell Cattell Russell amp Bedwell 2003 30 Raymond Cattell s 16 Personality Factors EditBelow is a table outlining the personality traits measured by the 16PF Questionnaire Descriptors of low range Primary factor Descriptors of high rangeImpersonal distant cool reserved detached formal aloof Warmth A Warm outgoing attentive to others kindly easygoing participating likes peopleConcrete thinking less intelligent lower general mental capacity unable to handle abstract problems Reasoning B Abstract thinking more intelligent bright higher general mental capacity fast learnerReactive emotionally changeable affected by feelings emotionally less stable easily upset Emotional Stability C Emotionally stable adaptive mature faces reality calmlyDeferential cooperative avoids conflict submissive humble obedient easily led docile accommodating Dominance E Dominant forceful assertive aggressive competitive stubborn bossySerious restrained prudent taciturn introspective silent Liveliness F Lively animated spontaneous enthusiastic happy go lucky cheerful expressive impulsiveExpedient nonconforming disregards rules self indulgent Rule Consciousness G Rule conscious dutiful conscientious conforming moralistic staid rule boundShy threat sensitive timid hesitant intimidated Social Boldness H Socially bold venturesome thick skinned uninhibitedUtilitarian objective unsentimental tough minded self reliant no nonsense rough Sensitivity I Sensitive aesthetic sentimental tender minded intuitive refinedTrusting unsuspecting accepting unconditional easy Vigilance L Vigilant suspicious skeptical distrustful oppositionalGrounded practical prosaic solution oriented steady conventional Abstractedness M Abstract imaginative absentminded impractical absorbed in ideasForthright genuine artless open guileless naive unpretentious involved Privateness N Private discreet nondisclosing shrewd polished worldly astute diplomaticSelf assured unworried complacent secure free of guilt confident self satisfied Apprehension O Apprehensive self doubting worried guilt prone insecure worrying self blamingTraditional attached to familiar conservative respecting traditional ideas Openness to Change Q1 Open to change experimental liberal analytical critical freethinking flexibilityGroup oriented affiliative a joiner and follower dependent Self Reliance Q2 Self reliant solitary resourceful individualistic self sufficientTolerates disorder unexacting flexible undisciplined lax self conflict impulsive careless of social rules uncontrolled Perfectionism Q3 Perfectionistic organized compulsive self disciplined socially precise exacting will power control self sentimentalRelaxed placid tranquil torpid patient composed low drive Tension Q4 Tense high energy impatient driven frustrated over wrought time drivenPrimary Factors and Descriptors in Cattell s 16 Personality Factor Model Adapted from Conn amp Rieke 1994 Relationship to five factor models EditIn the Fourth and Fifth Editions of the 16PF there were five global factors that seem to correspond fairly closely to the Big Five personality traits 34 The Big Five BF trait of Openness seems to be related to 16PF Openness Tough mindedness The BF trait of Conscientiousness to the 16PF Self Control the BF Extraversion to the 16PF Extraversion the BF Agreeableness Dis Agreeableness to the 16PF Independence Accommodation and the BF Neuroticism to the 16PF Anxiety 35 In fact the development of the Big Five factors began in 1963 with W T Norman factor analyzing responses to the same items as the 16PF replicating Cattell s work and suggested that five factors would be sufficient 36 However one big technical difference between Cattell s five Global Factors and popular five factor models was Cattell s insistence on using oblique rotation in the factor analysis whereas Goldberg and Costa amp McCrae used orthogonal rotation in their factor analysis Oblique rotation allows the factors to correlate with each other whereas orthogonal rotation restricts the factors from correlating with each other Although personality traits are thought to be correlated using orthogonal factor analysis makes the factors easier to understand and to work on statistically in research This is one of the reasons the Big Five traits have definitions that are different from the 16PF global factors For example as seen in the table below in Cattell s model the primary personality trait of Dominance Factor E is strongly located in the Independence Accommodation global factor which represents a quality of fearless original thinking and forceful independent actions However other popular big five models consider Dominance as a facet of several Big Five traits including Extraversion Dis Agreeableness and Conscientiousness Thus Dominance is spread across a range of Big Five factors with little influence on any one Cattell amp Mead 2008 Below is a table that shows how the 16 primary factors are related to the five global factors of the 16 Personality Factor theory Compare with the Hierarchical Structure of the Big Five Also note that factor B is considered separate from the other factors because it is not a part of the hierarchical structure of personality in the same way as the other factors citation needed Factor analytic strategy EditAssumptions shared by standardized personality tests simply stated are that humans possess characteristics or traits that are stable vary from individual to individual and can be measured 37 38 Factor analysis is a statistical procedure for reducing the redundancy in a set of intercorrelated scores One major technique of factor analysis the principal components method finds the minimum number of common factors that can account for an interrelated set of scores 37 39 Cattell s goal was to empirically determine and measure the essence of personality 37 Cattell used factor analysis to reduce thousands of psychological traits into what he believed to be 16 of the basic dimensions or source traits of human personality As a result he created the 16PF personality test 37 38 16PF global and primary factors EditIntroversion Extroversion Low Anxiety High Anxiety Receptivity Tough Mindedness Accommodation Independence Lack of Restraint Self ControlA Reserved Warm C Emotionally Stable Reactive A Warm Reserved E Deferential Dominant F Serious Lively B Problem SolvingF Serious Lively L Trusting Vigilant I Sensitive Unsentimental H Shy Bold G Expedient Rule ConsciousH Shy Bold O Self Assured Apprehensive M Abstracted Practical L Trusting Vigilant M Abstracted PracticalN Private Forthright Q4 Relaxed Tense Q1 Open to Change Traditional Q1 Traditional Open to Change Q3 Tolerates Disorder PerfectionisticQ2 Self Reliant Group OrientedHistory and development EditCattell physical sciences background Edit The 16PF Questionnaire was created from a fairly unusual perspective among personality tests Most personality tests are developed to measure just the pre conceived traits that are of interest to a particular theorist or researcher The main author of the 16PF Raymond B Cattell had a strong background in the physical sciences especially chemistry and physics at a time when the basic elements of the physical world were being discovered placed in the periodic table and used as the basis for understanding the fundamental nature of the physical world and for further inquiry From this background in the physical sciences Cattell developed the belief that all fields are best understood by first seeking to find the fundamental underlying elements in that domain and then developing a valid way to measure and research these elements Cattell 1965 40 Personality research author Schuerger stated that Cattell s goal in creating the 16PF Questionnaire was to provide a thorough research based map of normal personality 41 When Cattell moved from the physical sciences into the field of psychology in the 1920s he described his disappointment about finding that it consisted largely of a wide array of abstract unrelated theories and concepts that had little or no scientific bases He found that most personality theories were based on philosophy and on personal conjecture or were developed by medical professionals such as Jean Charcot and Sigmund Freud who relied on their personal intuition to reconstruct what they felt was going on inside people based on observing individuals with serious psycho pathological problems Cattell 1957 4 described the concerns he felt as a scientist In psychology there is an ocean of spawning intuitions and comfortable assumptions which we share with the layman and out of which we climb with difficulty to the plateaus of scientific objectivity Scientific advance hinges on the introduction of measurement to the field under investigation Psychology has bypassed the necessary descriptive taxonomic and metric stages through which all healthy sciences first must pass If Aristotle and other philosophers could get no further by sheer power of reasoning in two thousand years of observation it is unlikely that we shall do so now For psychology to take its place as an effective science we must become less concerned with grandiose theory than with establishing through research certain basic laws of relationship p 3 5 Thus Cattell s goal in creating the 16PF Questionnaire was to discover the number and nature of the fundamental traits of human personality and to develop a way to measure these dimensions At the University of London Cattell worked with Charles Spearman who was developing factor analysis to aid in his quest to discover the basic factors of human ability Cattell thought that could also be applied to the area of personality He reasoned that human personality must have basic underlying universal dimensions just as the physical world had basic building blocks like oxygen and hydrogen He felt that if the basic building blocks of personality were discovered and measured then human behavior e g creativity leadership altruism or aggression could become increasingly understandable and predictable Lexical Hypothesis 1936 Edit In 1936 Gordon Allport and H S Odbert hypothesized that Those individual differences that are most salient and socially relevant in people s lives will eventually become encoded into their language the more important such a difference the more likely is it to become expressed as a single word This statement has become known as the Lexical Hypothesis which posits that if there is a word for a trait it must be a real trait Allport and Odbert used this hypothesis to identify personality traits by working through two of the most comprehensive dictionaries of the English language available at the time and extracting 18 000 personality describing words From this gigantic list they extracted 4500 personality describing adjectives which they considered to describe observable and relatively permanent traits Cattell and his colleagues began a comprehensive program of international research aimed at identifying and mapping out the basic underlying dimensions of personality Their goal was to systematically measure the widest possible range of personality concepts in a belief that all aspects of human personality which are or have been of importance interest or utility have already become recorded in the substance of language Cattell R B 1943 p 483 42 They wanted to include every known personality dimension in their investigation and thus began with the largest existing compilation of personality traits Allport and Odbert 1936 43 Over time they used factor analysis to reduce the massive list of traits by analyzing the underlying patterns among them They studied personality data from different sources e g objective measures of daily behavior interpersonal ratings and questionnaire results and measured these traits in diverse populations including working adults university students and military personnel Cattell 1957 1973 4 44 16 Personality Factors identified 1949 Edit The 16 Personality Factors were identified in 1949 by Raymond Cattell 45 He believed that in order to adequately map out personality one had to utilize L Data life records or observation Q data information from questionnaires and T data information from objective tests 46 The development of the 16PF Questionnaire although confusingly named was an attempt to develop an adequate measure of T data Cattell analyzed the list of 4500 adjectives and organized the list of adjectives into fewer than 171 items and asked subjects to rate people whom they knew on each of the adjectives on the list an example of L data because the information was gathered from observers This allowed Cattell to narrow down to 35 terms and factor analysis in 1945 1947 and 1948 revealed a 11 or 12 factor solution 47 48 49 In 1949 Cattell found that there were 4 additional factors which he believed consisted of information that could only be provided through self rating This process allowed the use of ratings by observers questionnaires and objective measurements of actual behavior 44 50 51 In 1952 the ILLIAC I became available at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign to be used for factor analysis 52 Together the original 12 factors and the 4 covert factors made up the original 16 primary personality factors 53 As the five factor theory gained traction and research on the 16 factors continued subsequent analysis identified five factors underlying the 16 factors Cattell called these global factors The 16PF factorial structure resembles that of Szondi test and the Berufsbilder test BTT despite being based on different theories 54 Analytic study and revisions of the factors 1949 2011 Edit Because the 16PF dimensions were developed through factor analysis construct validity is provided by studies that confirm its factor structure Over several decades of factor analytic study Cattell and his colleagues gradually refined and validated their list of underlying source traits The search resulted in the sixteen unitary traits of the 16PF Questionnaire These traits have remained the same over the last 50 years of research In addition the 16PF Questionnaire traits are part of a multi variate personality model that provides a broader framework including developmental environmental and hereditary patterns of the traits and how they change across the life span Cattell 1973 1979 1980 55 56 The validity of the factor structure of the 16PF Questionnaire the 16 primary factors and 5 global factors has been supported by more than 60 published studies Cattell amp Krug 1986 Conn amp Rieke 1994 Hofer and Eber 2002 57 58 59 Research has also supported the comprehensiveness of the 16PF traits all dimensions on other major personality tests e g the NEO Personality Inventory the California Psychological Inventory the Personality Research Form and the Myers Briggs Type Indicator have been found to be contained within the 16PF scales in regression and factor analytic studies Conn amp Rieke 1994 Cattell 1996 34 Since its release in 1949 the 16PF Questionnaire has been revised four times once in 1956 once in 1962 once in 1968 and the current version was developed in 1993 The US version of the test was also re standardized in 2002 along with the development of forms for children and teenagers versions for the UK Ireland France and the Netherlands were re standardised in 2011 Additionally there is a shortened form available primarily for employee selection and the questionnaire has been adapted into more than 35 languages The questionnaire has also been validated in a range of international cultures over time dubious discuss 60 61 62 The 16PF was distributed through the Institute for Personality and Ability Testing IPAT founded by Cattell and based in Savoy Illinois 63 In January 2003 the Institute was purchased by UK private company OPP Limited who administered the 16PF worldwide 63 It later became a subsidiary of Performance Assessment Network PAN 64 which in 2017 was acquired by PSI 65 The original Big Five traits EditFrom the beginning of his research Cattell found personality traits to have a multi level hierarchical structure Cattell 1946 4 66 The first goal of these researchers was to find the most fundamental primary traits of personality Next they factor analyzed these numerous primary traits to see if these traits had a structure of their own i e if some of them naturally went together in self defining meaningful groupings They consistently found that the primary traits themselves came together in particular meaningful groupings to form broader secondary or global traits each with its own particular focus and function within personality Cattell amp Schuerger 2003 For example the first global trait they found was Extraversion Introversion It resulted from the natural affinity of five primary traits that defined different reasons for an individual to move toward versus away from other people see below They found that there was a natural tendency for these traits to go together in the real world and to define an important domain of human behavior social behavior This global factor Global Extraversion Introversion the tendency to move toward versus away from interaction with others is composed from the following primary traits Warmth Factor A the tendency to move toward others seeking closeness and connection because of genuine feelings of caring sympathy and concern versus the tendency to be reserved and detached and thus be independent and unemotional Liveliness Factor F the tendency to be high energy fun loving and carefree and to spontaneously move towards others in an animated stimulating manner Low scorers tend to be more serious and self restrained and to be cautious unrushed and judicious Social Boldness Factor H the tendency to seek social interaction in a confident fearless manner enjoying challenges risks and being the center of attention Low scorers tend to be shy and timid and to be more modest and risk avoidant Forthrightness Factor N the tendency to want to be known by others to be open forthright and genuine in social situations and thus to be self revealing and unguarded Low scorers tend to be more private and unself revealing and to be harder to get to know Affiliative Factor Q2 the tendency to seek companionship and enjoy belonging to and functioning in a group inclusive cooperative good follower willing to compromise Low scorers tend to be more individualistic and self reliant and to value their autonomy In a similar manner these researchers found that four other primary traits consistently merged to define another global factor which they called Receptivity or Openness versus Tough Mindedness This factor was made up of four primary traits that describe different kinds of openness to the world Openness to sensitive feelings emotions intuition and aesthetic dimensions Sensitivity Factor I Openness to abstract theoretical ideas conceptual thinking and imagination Abstractedness Factor M Openness to free thinking inquiry exploration of new approaches and innovative solutions Openness to Change Factor Q1 and Openness to people and their feelings Warmth Factor A Another global factor Self Controlled or conscientious versus Unrestrained resulted from the natural coming together of four primary factors that define the different ways that human beings manage to control their behavior Rule Consciousness Factor G involves adopting and conscientiously following society s accepted standards of behavior Perfectionism Factor Q3 describes a tendency to be self disciplined organized thorough attentive to detail and goal oriented Seriousness Factor F involves a tendency to be cautious reflective self restrained and deliberate in making decisions and Groundedness Factor M involves a tendency to stay focused on concrete pragmatic realistic solutions Because the global factors were developed by factor analyzing the primary traits the meanings of the global traits were determined by the primary traits which made them up In addition then the global factors provide the overarching conceptual framework for understanding the meaning and function of each of the primary traits Thus the two levels of personality are essentially inter connected and inter related However it is the primary traits that provide a clear definition of the individual s unique personality Two people might have exactly the same level of Extraversion but still be quite different from each other For example they may both be at the 80 on Extraversion and both tend to move toward others to the same degree but they may be doing it for quite different reasons One person might achieve an 80 on Extraversion by being high on Social Boldness Factor H confident bold talkative adventurous fearless attention seeking and on Liveliness Factor F high energy enthusiastic fun loving impulsive but Reserved low on Factor A detached cool unfeeling objective This individual would be talkative bold and impulsive but not very sensitive to others people s needs or feelings The second Extravert might be high on Warmth Factor A kind soft hearted caring and nurturing and Group Oriented low Factor Q2 companionable cooperative and participating but Shy low on Factor H timid modest and easily embarrassed This second Extravert would tend to show quite different social behavior and be caring considerate and attentive to others but not forward bold or loud and thus have quite a different effect on his her social environment Today the global traits of personality are commonly known as the Big Five The Big Five traits are most important for getting an abstract theoretical understanding of the big overarching domains of personality and in understanding how different traits of personality relate to each other and how different research findings relate to each other The big five are important for understanding and interpreting an individual s personality profile mainly in getting a broad overview of their personality make up at the highest level of personality organization However it is still the scores on the more specific primary traits that define the rich unique personality make up of any individual These more numerous primary traits have repeatedly been found to be the most powerful in predicting and understanding the complexity of actual daily behavior Ashton 1998 Goldberg 1999 Mershon amp Gorsuch 1988 Paunonen amp Ashton 2001 67 68 69 70 Key features Edit16PF is one of the world s most examined personality tests 71 The 16PF assessment is easy to administer requiring only 35 to 50 minutes to complete Five distinct report options give the 16PF test utility in a wide variety of settings Because the relationship between the test items and the traits measured by the 16PF instrument is not obvious it is difficult for the test taker to deliberately tailor responses to achieve a desired outcome The Couple s Counseling Report includes an easy to understand narrative summary of results to share with the couple 38 See also EditMinnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory MMPI Neuroticism Extraversion Openness Personality Inventory NEO PI Trait theoryReferences Edit Karson W amp J W O Dell 1976 A Guide to the Clinical Use of the 16PF University of Michigan Press page needed Schuerger J M March 1995 Career Assessment and The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire Journal of Career Assessment 3 2 157 175 doi 10 1177 106907279500300204 S2CID 143342751 Cattell R B 1978 Use of Factor Analysis in Behavioral and Life Sciences New York Plenum page needed a b c d Cattell R B 1957 Personality and Motivation Structure and Measurement New York World Book page needed Boyle Gregory J January 1989 Re examination of the major personality type factors in the Cattell Comrey and Eysenck scales Were the factor solutions by Noller et al optimal Personality and Individual Differences 10 12 1289 1299 doi 10 1016 0191 8869 89 90241 9 Cattell R B 1995 The fallacy of five factors in the personality sphere The Psychologist 8 5 207 208 Boyle G J 2008 Critique of Five Factor Model FFM In G J Boyle G Matthews amp D H Saklofske Eds The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment Vol 1 Personality Theories and Models Los Angeles CA Sage ISBN 1 4129 2365 4 Cattell R B 1973 Personality and Mood by Questionnaire San Francisco CA Jossey Bass page needed Cattell H E P amp Mead A D 2008 The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire 16PF In G J Boyle G Matthews amp D H Saklofske Eds The Sage Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment Vol 2 Personality Measurement and Testing Los Angeles CA Sage page needed Boyle G J 2008 Simplifying the Cattellian psychometric model In G J Boyle G Matthews amp D H Saklofske Eds The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment Vol 1 Personality Theories and Models Los Angeles CA Sage Publishers ISBN 1 4129 2365 4 Cattell Raymond B Boyle Gregory J Chant David 2002 Enriched behavioral prediction equation and its impact on structured learning and the dynamic calculus Psychological Review 109 1 202 205 doi 10 1037 0033 295X 109 1 202 PMID 11863038 Archived from the original on 2011 04 13 Retrieved 2020 11 13 Cattell H E P amp Mead A D 2008 The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire 16PF In G J Boyle G Matthews amp D H Saklofske Eds The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment Vol 2 Personality Measurement and Testing Los Angeles CA Sage ISBN 1 4129 2364 6 a b 16PF Sixteen Personality Factors Raymond Cattell s 16PF questionnaire Archived from the original on 2014 02 01 Retrieved 2014 01 31 a b Schuerger J M 2001 16PF Adolescent Personality Questionnaire Champaign IL IPAT page needed Porter R B amp Cattell R B 1985 Handbook for the Children s Personality Questionnaire CPQ Champaign IL IPAT page needed Coan Richard W Cattell Raymond B December 1959 The Development of the Early School Personality Questionnaire The Journal of Experimental Education 28 2 143 152 doi 10 1080 00220973 1959 11010646 Lichtenstein Don Dreger Ralph Mason Cattell Raymond B 1 April 1986 Factor Structure and Standardization of the Preschool Personality Questionnaire Journal of Social Behavior and Personality 1 2 165 182 ProQuest 1292282028 Hakstian A R amp Cattell R B 1982 Manual for the Comprehensive Ability Battery Champaign IL IPAT page needed Cattell R B amp Cattell A K S 1973 Measuring intelligence with the Culture Fair Tests Champaign IL IPAT page needed Cattell R B Horn J L Sweney A B amp Radcliffe J 1964 Handbook for the Motivation Analysis Test MAT Champaign IL IPAT page needed Krug S E Cattell R B amp Sweney A B 1976 Handbook for the School Motivation Analysis Test SMAT Champaign IL IPAT page needed Cattell R B et al 1982 The Children s Motivation Analysis Test CMAT Champaign IL IPAT page needed Boyle Gregory J Richards Lisa M Baglioni Anthony J December 1993 Children s motivation analysis test CMAT An experimental manipulation of curiosity and boredom Personality and Individual Differences 15 6 637 643 doi 10 1016 0191 8869 93 90005 N Archived from the original on 2017 09 22 Retrieved 2020 11 13 Curran J P amp Cattell R B 1976 Manual for the Eight State Questionnaire 8SQ Champaign IL IPAT page needed Cattell R B Cattell A K amp Cattell H E P 1993 16PF Fifth Edition Questionnaire Champaign IL IPAT page needed Russell M T amp Karol D 2002 The 16PF Fifth Edition Administrator s Manual Champaign IL IPAT page needed Cattell R B Eber H W amp Tatsuoka M M 1970 Handbook for the Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire 16PF Champaign IL IPAT page needed 16pf administration instructions PDF 2008 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 06 02 Retrieved May 29 2021 Sten score Oxford Reference Archived from the original on 2018 03 16 Retrieved May 29 2021 a b Cattell R B Cattell A K Cattell H E P Russell M T amp Bedwell S 2003 The Psychological Evaluation Questionnaire Champaign IL Institute for Personality and Ability Testing Karson M Karson S amp O Dell J W 1997 16PF Interpretation in Clinical Practice A guide to the Fifth Edition Champaign IL Institute for Personality and Ability Testing Cattell H B 1989 The 16PF Personality in Depth Champaign IL Institute for Personality and Ability Testing Cattell H E amp Schuerger J M 2003 Essentials of the 16PF New York John Wiley amp Sons a b Cattell H E P 1996 The original big five A historical perspective European Review of Psychology 46 1 5 14 Conn S R amp Rieke M L 1994 The 16PF Fifth Edition technical manual Champaign IL Institute for Personality and Ability Testing Inc Costa P T Jr McCrae R R 1985 The NEO Personality Inventory Manual Odessa FL Psychological Assessment Resources a b c d Kaplan R M amp Saccuzzo D P 2013 Psychological testing Principles applications and issues 8th ed Belmont CA Wadsworth a b c Pearson Education Inc n d 16pf fifth edition Clinical assessment Retrieved December 8 2013 from http www pearsonassessments com HAIWEB Cultures en us Productdetail htm Pid PAg101 amp Mode summary Cattell R B 1952 Factor analysis New York Wiley Cattell R B 1965 The Scientific Analysis of Personality NYC NY Penguin Group page needed Schuerger J M 2009 The 16 Personality Factor Questionnaire 16PF In C E Watkins Jr and V L Campbell Eds Testing and Assessment in Counseling Practice pp 67 99 Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc Cattell Raymond B 1943 The description of personality basic traits resolved into clusters The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 38 4 476 506 doi 10 1037 h0054116 Allport Gordon W Odbert Henry S 1936 Trait names A psycho lexical study Psychological Monographs 47 1 i 171 doi 10 1037 h0093360 a b Cattell R B 1973 Personality and mood by questionnaire San Francisco Jossey Bass page needed Cattell R B 1949 The sixteen personality factor questionnaire Institute for Personality and Ability Testing Cattell H E P and Schuerger J M 2003 Essentials of 16PF Assessment Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons Inc page needed Cattell Raymond B 1945 The Description of Personality Principles and Findings in a Factor Analysis The American Journal of Psychology 58 1 69 90 doi 10 2307 1417576 JSTOR 1417576 Cattell Raymond B 1 September 1947 Confirmation and clarification of primary personality factors Psychometrika 12 3 197 220 doi 10 1007 BF02289253 PMID 20260610 S2CID 28667497 Cattell Raymond B July 1948 The primary personality factors in women compared with those in men British Journal of Statistical Psychology 1 2 114 130 doi 10 1111 j 2044 8317 1948 tb00231 x Cattell R B 1946 The description and measurement of personality New York World Book Cattell R B 1957 Personality and motivation structure and measurement New York World Book Cattell R B Cattell A K S November 1955 Factor Rotation for Proportional Profiles Analytical Solution and an Example British Journal of Statistical Psychology 8 2 83 92 doi 10 1111 j 2044 8317 1955 tb00323 x Cattell H B 1989 The 16PF Personality In Depth Champaign IL Institute for Personality and Ability Testing Inc Welter Giselle Muller Roger Capitao Claudio Garcia 2009 Professional tendency and personality research on the correlation among measures of these constructs Psicologia Ciencia e Profissao 29 3 588 601 doi 10 1590 S1414 98932009000300012 Cattell Raymond Bernard 1979 The Structure of Personality in Its Environment Springer Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8261 2120 2 page needed Cattell Raymond Bernard 1980 A Systems Theory of Maturation and Structured Learning Springer Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8261 2124 0 page needed Conn Steven R Rieke Mark L 1994 The 16PF Fifth Edition Technical Manual Institute for Personality and Ability Testing ISBN 978 0 918296 22 1 page needed Cattell Raymond B Krug Samuel E September 1986 The Number of Factors in the 16PF A Review of the Evidence with Special Emphasis on Methodological Problems Educational and Psychological Measurement 46 3 509 522 doi 10 1177 0013164486463002 S2CID 143507573 Hofer Scott M Eber Herbert W 2002 Second order factor structure of the Cattell Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire In de Raad Boele Perugini Marco eds Big Five Assessment Hogrefe amp Huber pp 397 404 ISBN 978 0 88937 242 9 Cattell Heather E P Mead Alan D 2008 The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire 16PF In Boyle Gregory J Matthews Gerald Saklofske Donald H eds The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment Volume 2 Personality Measurement and Testing pp 135 159 doi 10 4135 9781849200479 n7 ISBN 978 1 4129 4652 0 Tsujioka Bien Cattell Raymond B December 1965 Constancy and Difference in Personality Structure and Mean Profile in the Questionnaire Medium from Applying the 16 P F Test in America and Japan British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology 4 4 287 297 doi 10 1111 j 2044 8260 1965 tb00478 x Philip Alistair E September 1972 Cross Cultural Stability of Second Order Factors in the 16 PF British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology 11 3 276 283 doi 10 1111 j 2044 8260 1972 tb00814 x a b IPAT Inc Central Illinois Business Magazine Archived from the original on 2022 12 31 Retrieved 2022 12 31 Use of Logos and Materials PDF Performance Assessment Network 2 May 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 1 January 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2023 PSI Services LLC Acquires Performance Assessment Network PAN Talogy Retrieved 2022 12 31 Cattell s 16 Personality Factor 16pf Questionnaire Naman Retrieved 2022 05 20 Ashton Michael C 1998 Personality and job performance the importance of narrow traits Journal of Organizational Behavior 19 3 289 303 doi 10 1002 SICI 1099 1379 199805 19 3 lt 289 AID JOB841 gt 3 0 CO 2 C JSTOR 3100173 ProQuest 228800151 Goldberg L R 1999 A broad bandwidth public domain personality inventory measuring the lower level facets of several five factor models In I Mervielde I Deary F De Fruyt amp F Ostendorf Eds Personality psychology in Europe Vol 7 7 28 Tilburg The Netherlands Tilburg University Press Mershon Bryan Gorsuch Richard L 1988 Number of factors in the personality sphere Does increase in factors increase predictability of real life criteria Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 55 4 675 680 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 55 4 675 Paunonen Sampo V Ashton Michael C 2001 Big Five factors and facets and the prediction of behavior Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 81 3 524 539 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 81 3 524 PMID 11554651 Mabon Hunter 2014 Arbetspsykologisk testning Om urvalsmetoder i arbetslivet Assessio Page 322 ISBN 9789174183085 Further reading EditGregory Robert J 2011 Psychological Testing History Principles and Applications Sixth ed Boston Allyn amp Bacon ISBN 978 0 205 78214 7 External links Edit16PF permanent dead link l 16PF for Corporate Industry 1 Personality Assessment Network Inc PAN which owns the IPAT Institute founded by Raymond B Cattell The International Personality Item Pool contains scales designed to mimic the 16PFQ an interactive implementation can be found here Archived 2013 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 16PF Questionnaire amp oldid 1141895711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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